R&B crooner R. Kelly charged with sexually assaulting teenage girls
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Grammy-winning R&B singer R. Kelly was charged in Chicago on Friday with aggravated sexual assault of four people, including three teenage girls, following years of accusations against the performer.
Kelly, 52, was charged in a 10-count Cook County Circuit Court indictment handed down two months after the debut of a six-hour documentary series on the Lifetime television network in which multiple women accused him of sexual misconduct and abuse.
Lawyers for the R&B superstar, whose real name is Robert Sylvester Kelly, could not be reached for comment on Friday.
Attorney Steven Greenberg told Reuters in an interview in January the Lifetime series was a “complete fabrication” and there was no evidence to support the allegations against his client.
At a news conference on Friday after the charges were detailed in a court filing, the Cook County state’s attorney, Kimberly Foxx, said three of the four victims Kelly is accused of abusing between 1998 and 2010 were under age 17 at the time of the assaults.
Kelly, who had not yet been taken into custody, was expected to appear in court on Saturday for a bond hearing, she said. The entertainer faces a maximum sentence of 70 years in prison if convicted.
Later on Friday, attorney Michael Avenatti, who has represented porn star Stormy Daniels in a legal battle with President Donald Trump, told a separate news conference he has been retained by two people who he said were victims, as well as two parents and two whistleblowers from Kelly’s inner circle.
Avenatti said his firm had uncovered a 40-minute videotape shot in the late 1990s allegedly showing Kelly performing sexual acts with a 14-year-old girl. Avenatti said he had given the tape to prosecutors.
Chicago prosecutors have not said if that footage was part of their case against Kelly.
YEARS OF ACCUSATIONS
Avenatti said he would seek to expose the complicity of members of Kelly’s inner circle who he said helped cover up the abuse. “Mr. Kelly did not do this alone,” he said.
Kelly, best known for his hit single “I Believe I Can Fly,” has for years denied accusations of abuse swirling around him.
According to the Lifetime documentary, he married 15-year-old singer Aaliyah in 1994, a union that was annulled months later by her parents. In 2008, Kelly was tried and acquitted on child pornography charges in Chicago.
Aaliyah died at age 22 in 2001 in a plane crash.
But “Surviving R. Kelly” touched off a new furor on social media when it debuted in January, prompting his record label, Sony Music-owned RCA, to end its relationship with the hitmaker.
Singer Lady Gaga, who had recorded a sexually suggestive 2013 duet with Kelly, “Do What U Want (With My Body)”, apologized for the song, removed it from streaming services and vowed to never work with him again.
“We are proud that Lifetime was able to provide a platform for survivors to be heard,” Lifetime said in a written statement on Friday.
It was not immediately clear if the charges announced on Friday in Chicago stemmed from accusations made in the documentary or if any of the alleged victims, who were identified in the indictment only by their initials, were the same.
Following the debut of the documentary in January, Foxx at a news conference called for anyone who felt they had been abused by the singer to come forward.
Social media erupted again on Friday after the charges were announced.
“It took this long to indict R.Kelly because the victims are Black girls,” political analyst Zerlina Maxwell, who describes herself as a survivor of sexual assault, wrote on Twitter.
Last month, a former manager for the singer turned himself in to authorities in Georgia, where he was wanted on a charge of making threats against one of the families that took part in the documentary.
Kelly, a three-time Grammy winner whose hits also include “Bump N’ Grind” and “Your Body’s Callin,” grew up in a Chicago public housing project where, according to his autobiography he was sexually abused beginning at age 8.
Reporting by Suzannah Gonzales in Chicago; Additional reporting by Dan Whitcomb in Los Angele and Alex Dobuzinskis in Los Angeles and Andrew Hay in New Mexico; Writing by Dan Whitcomb; Editing by Bill Tarrant and Leslie Adler
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